WARNING

The court hearing this matter directs that the following notice be attached
to the file:
A non-publication and non-broadcast order in this proceeding has been
issued under subsection 486.4(1) of the Criminal Code. This subsection and
subsection 486.6(1) of the Criminal Code, which is concerned with the
consequence of failure to comply with an order made under subsection 486.4(1),
read as follows:
486.4 Order restricting publication — sexual offences.—(1) Subject to
subsection (2), the presiding judge or justice may make an order directing that
any information that could identify the complainant or a witness shall not be
published in any document or broadcast or transmitted in any way, in
proceedings in respect of
(a) any of the following offences:
(i) an offence under section 151, 152, 153, 153.1, 155, 159, 160,
162, 163.1, 170, 171, 172, 172.1, 173, 210, 211, 212, 213, 271,
272, 273, 279.01, 279.02, 279.03, 346 or 347,
(ii) an offence under section 144 (rape), 145 (attempt to commit
rape), 149 (indecent assault on female), 156 (indecent assault
on male) or 245 (common assault) or subsection 246(1) (assault
with intent) of the Criminal Code, chapter C-34 of the Revised
Statutes of Canada, 1970, as it read immediately before January
4, 1983, or
(iii) an offence under subsection 146(1) (sexual intercourse with a
female under 14) or (2) (sexual intercourse with a female
between 14 and 16) or section 151 (seduction of a female
between 16 and 18), 153 (sexual intercourse with stepdaughter), 155 (buggery or bestiality), 157 (gross indecency),
166 (parent or guardian procuring defilement) or 167
(householder permitting defilement) of the Criminal Code,
chapter C-34 of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1970, as it read
immediately before January 1, 1988; or
(b) two or more offences being dealt with in the same proceeding, at least
one of which is an offence referred to in any of subparagraphs (a)(i) to
(iii).
(2) Mandatory order on application.— In proceedings in respect of the offences referred to in paragraph (1)(a) or (b), the presiding judge or justice shall
(a) at the first reasonable opportunity, inform any witness under the age of
eighteen years and the complainant of the right to make an application
for the order; and
(b) on application made by the complainant, the prosecutor or any such
witness, make the order.
. . .

486.6 Offence.—(1) Every person who fails to comply with an order made
under subsection 486.4(1), (2) or (3) or 486.5(1) or (2) is guilty of an offence
punishable on summary conviction.

Before Justice William B. Horkins
Heard on February 1 through February 11, 2016
Reasons for Judgment released on March 24, 2016
Michael Callaghan and Corie Langdon ............................................ counsel for the Crown
Marie Henein, Danielle Robataille and Samuel Walker ................... counsel for the accused

HORKINS, W. B., J.:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Jian Ghomeshi is charged with five criminal offences relating to four
separate events, involving three different complainants. Two of the complainants
are shielded from identification and so I refer to the complainant in counts 1 and
2 by the initials L.R. and the complainant in count 5 by the initials S.D.
[2]
The charges with respect to L.R. are two counts of sexual assault. The
first assault is alleged to have occurred between December 1st and 31st, 2002
and the second assault on January 2nd, 2003.
[3]
The charges with respect to Lucy DeCoutere are sexual assault and
overcoming resistance to sexual assault by choking. These events were originally
NOTE: This judgment is under a publication ban described in the WARNING page(s) at the
start of this document. If the WARNING page(s) is (are) missing, please contact the court
office.

— 2 —
alleged to have occurred between the 27th of June and the 2nd of July 2003 but
this has since been amended to conform to the evidence that the events
occurred between the 4th and 6th of July 2003.
[4]
The charge with respect to S.D. is sexual assault. This was originally
alleged to have occurred between the 15th and 20th of July 2003. This has now
been amended to conform to the evidence that the event occurred between the
15th of July and the 2nd of August 2003.
The Elements of the Offences
[5]
A criminal "assault" is an intentional application of force to the person of
another without that person’s consent. A "sexual assault" is an assault committed
in sexual circumstances such that the sexual integrity of the victim is violated.
The test to determine if an assault is "sexual" is an objective one. This test asks
whether the sexual nature of the contact would be apparent to a reasonable
person when viewed in light of all of the circumstances. The actual intent of the
accused is only one factor amongst many that may determine if the conduct
involved is "sexual".
[6]
"Sexual assault" as defined in our Criminal Code covers a very broad
spectrum of offensive activity; everything from an uninvited sexual touching to a
brutal rape falls under the one title of "sexual assault". The events as described
by each of the complainants, taken at face value, fall within this broad definition.
Each allegation of violence occurred in an intimate situation.
[7]
With respect to the complainant Lucy DeCoutere, there is an added
charge of choking with intent to overcome resistance. This offence is committed
when a perpetrator attempts to choke the victim with the intent of facilitating the
commission of an offence; in this instance, a sexual assault.
Background Context of the Case
[8]
At the time of the events in question, 2002 to 2003, Mr. Ghomeshi was
the host of a CBC television show called “PLAY”. Subsequently, and for several
years prior to when these complainants came forward in 2014, he was the host of
a CBC radio show called Q. Q is a show which features interviews with
prominent cultural and entertainment figures. With Mr. Ghomeshi as the host, Q
enjoyed a large and dedicated following.
[9]
It is fair to say that in 2014 Mr. Ghomeshi had achieved celebrity status
and was a prominent and well-known personality in the arts and entertainment
community in Canada. Then, suddenly, in 2014 the CBC publicly terminated him
in the midst of several allegations of disreputable behaviour towards a number of
women.
[10]

The publicity surrounding what I will call the “Ghomeshi Scandal” in

— 3 —
2014 is the context in which the complainants in this case came forward with
reports of sexual assaults that they say occurred in 2002 and 2003.
[11]
Each charge presented against Mr. Ghomeshi is based entirely on the
evidence of the complainant. Given the nature of the allegations this is not
unusual or surprising; however it is significant because, as a result, the judgment
of this Court depends entirely on an assessment of the credibility and the
reliability of each complainant as a witness.
THE COMPLAINT OF L.R.
[12]
The first two counts of the Information are allegations that the accused
sexually assaulted the complainant L.R. on two different occasions. The first
occasion is identified as having occurred on a date between December 1 st and
31st, 2002. The second allegation is identified as having occurred on the 2nd of
January 2003.
[13]
L.R. first met Mr. Ghomeshi while working as a server at the 2002 CBC
Christmas party. She felt that they made a connection. They flirted with each
other and she found Mr. Ghomeshi to be charming and charismatic. When
speaking of this first meeting, she reported: "He was smitten with me". He
seemed very enthusiastic. Mr. Ghomeshi invited L.R. to attend a future taping of
his show “PLAY” and gave her a note with the time and the place of the taping.
[14]
L.R.’s evidence was that on the evening she went to the show Mr.
Ghomeshi’s eyes lit up when he saw her arrive and he exclaimed, excitedly, "You
came!"
[15]
The show was taped in a restaurant bar. L.R. sat at the bar where she
was close to Mr. Ghomeshi during the show. After the show he asked her to
accompany him and some other CBC personalities to a nearby pub for a drink.
L.R. remembers that Mr. Ghomeshi was sweet and humble. She recalled certain
small details of the evening, for instance, he ordered a Heineken and she had a
ginger ale. She thought he was funny, intelligent, charming and a nice person.
[16]
After about half an hour Mr. Ghomeshi and L.R. left the pub. He drove
her to her car that was parked a short distance away. L.R. had a clear and very
specific recollection of his car being a bright yellow Volkswagen Beetle. It struck
her as being a "Disney car", a "Love Bug". She said she was impressed that he
was not driving a Hummer or some such vehicle. The "Love Bug" car was
significant to her because it contributed to her impression of his softness, his
kindness and generally, that it was safe to be with him.
[17]
When they arrived at the parking lot where L.R.’s car was parked they
sat in his car and talked. Mr. Ghomeshi was flirtatious and it was playful. He
asked her to undo some of the buttons of her blouse and she said no. She was

— 4 —
flirting with him. They were kissing, when suddenly he grabbed hold of her long
hair and yanked it "really, really hard". She said her thoughts at the time were:
"What have I gotten into here?"
[18]
L.R. described the yank to her hair as painful. Mr. Ghomeshi asked her if
she liked it like that, or words to that effect. They sat and talked for a while longer.
Mr. Ghomeshi had reverted back to being very nice. It was confusing and L.R.
was unsure what to think. She wondered if maybe he did not know his own
strength. They kissed goodbye. L.R. got out of the car and drove home. She
continued to ask herself whether he had really intended to hurt her.
[19]
L.R. was obviously very much taken with Mr. Ghomeshi. She was
separated from her husband at the time and agreed that she was considering Mr.
Ghomeshi as someone she would potentially be interested in going out with. She
decided to attend another taping of Mr. Ghomeshi’s show. He met her there and
was very nice to her. It was, to use her expression, "uneventful".
[20]
During the first week of January 2003, L.R. attended another taping of
Mr. Ghomeshi's show. On this occasion she went with a girlfriend. L.R. recounts
that Mr. Ghomeshi was happy to see them. They interacted and after the show
they all went to the pub. They were at the pub for less than an hour. L.R. said
that she flirted with Mr. Ghomeshi. He invited both women back to his home.
L.R.’s friend declined. After they dropped off her friend at the subway, L.R. and
Mr. Ghomeshi drove to his home.
[21]
While at Mr. Ghomeshi’s home the music was playing. They had a drink,
and they sat on the couch and talked. At one point L.R. was standing up near the
couch, looking at various things in the room and thinking what a charming person
he was. Then, suddenly, "out of the blue", he came up behind her, grabbed her
hair and pulled it. He then punched her in the head several times and pulled her
to her knees. The force of the blow was significant. She said it felt like walking
into a pole or hitting her head on the pavement. L.R. thought she might pass out.
[22]
Then, suddenly again, the rage was gone and Mr. Ghomeshi said, "You
should go now; I'll call you a cab." L.R. waited for the cab then left. She said, "He
threw me out like the trash."
[23]
L.R.’s evidence was that at the time of these events in 2003, she never
thought of calling the police. She did not think anyone would listen to her. L.R.
said she never saw Mr. Ghomeshi again after this incident.
[24]
Over a decade later, Mr. Ghomeshi was fired from the CBC and the
"Ghomeshi Scandal" broke in the media. L.R. came forward publically with her
complaint in response to the publicity and specifically, in response to then Chief
Blair of the Toronto Police Service publically encouraging those with complaints
about Jian Ghomeshi to come forward.

— 5 —
[25]
Several areas of concern in L.R.’s evidence were identified in crossexamination.
An Evolving Set of Facts
[26]
Prior to speaking with police, L.R. gave three media interviews about her
allegations against Mr. Ghomeshi. In these interviews, she described the first
assault as happening "out of the blue", as opposed to having happened in the
midst of a kissing session. Her police statement was initially similar to her media
interviews. It was only near the end of her police statement that L.R. had the hair
pulling and kissing "intertwined". Then at trial, the account of the event had
developed to the point of the hair pulling clearly occurring at the same time as
"sensuous" kissing. The event had evolved from a “common” assault into a
sexual assault.
[27]
When pressed about the shifting facts in her version of the events, L.R.
explained that while she was giving the media interviews, she was unsure of the
sequencing of events and "therefore … didn't put it in".
The Hair Extensions
[28]
The day following her police interview, L.R. sent a follow up email to the
police to explain that she remembered very clearly that she was wearing clip-on
hair extensions during the hair pulling incident in the car. In cross-examination,
L.R. testified that at some point she reversed this "clear" memory and is now
adamant that she was not wearing clip-on hair extensions during the incident.
[29]
L.R. frequently communicated with police by email and phone. She met
and spoke with Crown counsel. She did nothing to correct the misinformation she
provided to the police about the hair extensions. Equally as concerning as the
reversals on this point, was her claim that she had, in fact, disclosed this
reversed memory to the Crown. When pressed in cross-examination, she
conceded that this was not true.
The Car Window Head Smash
[30]
The day after her police interview, L.R. emailed the police to explain that
she was then beginning to remember that during the car incident, Mr. Ghomeshi
smashed her head into the window. In her previous four accounts of the incident,
provided to police and the media, she had never claimed that her head had been
smashed into the car window. Under cross-examination, she reverted to the
version of the car incident with no head smash. She then added that her head
had been resting against the window; something she had never mentioned
previously, at any time.
[31]
When pressed to explain these variations, L.R. said that at her police
interview she was simply "throwing thoughts" at the investigators.

— 6 —
[32]
When cross-examined about her new allegation of having her head
smashed into the window, L.R. denied demonstrating in her sworn police video
statement that her hair was pulled back towards the seat of the car, not towards
or into the window. She persisted in her denial of this, even when the police video
was played, clearly showing her demonstrating to the detectives how her hair
was pulled back. Her explanation for this shifting in her evidence was that during
the police interview she was "high on nerves".
[33]
L.R.'s memory about the assault at the house also shifted and changed
significantly. She told the Toronto Star and CBC TV that she was pulled down to
the floor prior to being assaulted at the house. She told CBC Radio that she was
thrown down to the ground. Then she told the police that the events were "blurry"
and did not know how she got to the ground. When trying to reconcile all of these
inconsistencies she said that, to her, being "thrown" and being "pulled" to the
ground are the same thing.
[34]
In her police interview, L.R. did not initially describe kissing as part of the
alleged assault and was unable to describe a clear sequence of events. At trial,
for the first time, she had kissing clearly intertwined with the alleged assault. She
remembered kissing on the couch and kissing standing up. L.R. could not
describe the conversation or what they were each doing prior to the assault. In
her evidence in-chief, there was no mention of doing a yoga pose just prior to the
assault. In cross-examination, L.R. was reminded of the yoga moves and her
earlier statement that Mr. Ghomeshi was bothered by them.
The “Love Bug”
[35]
One of L.R.'s clear memories was simply, and demonstrably, wrong.
She testified at length about Mr. Ghomeshi's bright yellow Volkswagen "Love
Bug" or "Disney car". This was a significant factor in her impression that Mr.
Ghomeshi was a "charming" and nice person. However, I find as a fact that Mr.
Ghomeshi did not acquire the Volkswagen Beetle that she described until seven
months after the event she was remembering.
[36]
In a case which turns entirely on the reliability of the evidence of the
complainant, this otherwise, perhaps, innocuous error takes on greater
significance. This was a central feature of her assessment of Mr. Ghomeshi as a
"nice guy" and a safe date. Her description of his car was an important feature of
her recollection of the first date. And yet we know that this memory is simply
wrong. The impossibility of this memory makes one seriously question, what else
might be honestly remembered by her and yet actually be equally wrong? This
demonstrably false memory weighs in the balance against the general reliability
of L.R.’s evidence as a whole.

— 7 —
The Flirtatious Emails
[37]
L.R. was firm in her evidence that following the second incident she
chose never to have any further contact with Mr. Ghomeshi. She testified that
every time she heard Mr. Ghomeshi on TV or radio, she had to turn it off. The
sound of Mr. Ghomeshi’s voice and the sight of his face made her relive the
trauma of the assault. L.R. could not even listen to the new host of Q because of
the traumatizing association with Mr. Ghomeshi.
[38]
L.R.’s evidence in this regard is irreconcilable with subsequently proven
facts. She sent a flirtatious email to Mr. Ghomeshi a year later. In her email, L.R
calls Mr. Ghomeshi “Play-boy"; a reference to his show. She refers, oddly, to him
ploughing snow, naked. She says it was "good to see you again." She is either
watching him, or watching his show. "Your show is still great," she writes. She
invites him to review a video she made and provides a hot link embedded into
the body of the message. L.R. provides him with her email address and phone
number so he can reply. Despite her invitation, she received no response. This is
not an email that L.R. could have simply forgotten about and it reveals conduct
that is completely inconsistent with her assertion that the mere thought of Jian
Ghomeshi traumatized her.
[39]
Six months later, L.R. sent another email to Mr. Ghomeshi. In it she said,
"Hi Jian, I've been watching you …" (here expressly referencing another TV
show), "hope all is well." She attached to this email a picture entitled
"beach1.jpg", which is a picture of her, reclined on a sandy beach, wearing a red
string bikini. This is not an email that she could have simply forgotten about. It
reveals conduct completely inconsistent with her assertion that the mere thought
of Mr. Ghomeshi traumatized her.
[40]
The negative impact that this after-the-fact conduct has on L.R.’s
credibility is surpassed by the fact that she never disclosed any of this to the
police or to the Crown.
[41]
It was only after she was confronted in cross-examination with the actual
emails and attachment that L.R. suddenly remembered not just attempting to
contact Mr. Ghomeshi but also that it was part of a plan. She said that her emails
were sent as “bait” to try to draw out Mr. Ghomeshi to contact her directly so that
she could confront him with what he had done to her.
[42]
I suppose this explanation could be true, except that this spontaneous
explanation of a plan to bait Mr. Ghomeshi is completely inconsistent with her
earlier stance that she wanted nothing to do with him, and that she was
traumatized by the mere thought of him. I am unable to satisfactorily reconcile
her evidence on these points.
[43]

The expectation of how a victim of abuse will, or should, be expected to

— 8 —
behave must not be assessed on the basis of stereotypical models. Having said
that, I have no hesitation in saying that the behaviour of this complainant is, at
the very least, odd. The factual inconsistencies in her evidence cause me to
approach her evidence with great scepticism.
[44]
L.R.'s evidence in-chief seemed rational and balanced. Under crossexamination, the value of her evidence suffered irreparable damage. Defence
counsel's questioning revealed inconsistencies, and incongruous and deceptive
conduct. L.R. has been exposed as a witness willing to withhold relevant
information from the police, from the Crown and from the Court. It is clear that
she deliberately breached her oath to tell the truth. Her value as a reliable
witness is diminished accordingly.
THE COMPLAINT OF LUCY DECOUTERE
[45]
I turn now to the charges relating to Ms. DeCoutere. She said that she
was choked and sexually assaulted in 2003. She came forward publically with
her allegations at the time of the intense publicity surrounding the CBC’s
dismissal of Mr. Ghomeshi in 2014.
[46]
Ms. DeCoutere first met Mr. Ghomeshi at the Banff Film Festival in June
of 2003. They enjoyed each other's company. Ms. DeCoutere found Mr.
Ghomeshi playful and flirtatious, and came away thinking he would be fun to be
with. They stayed in touch and planned to get together in Toronto over the
upcoming Canada Day long-weekend. She traveled from her home in Halifax to
visit with Mr. Ghomeshi as well as other friends living in Toronto
[47]
Early in her weekend visit, Ms. DeCoutere and Mr. Ghomeshi went out
for dinner. They enjoyed some pleasant conversation. He told her he would like
to go back to his place and listen to some music and just hold her. She thought
that this was “cheesy” and “put on”. After dinner they did go back to his home, a
short walk from the restaurant. Along the way he made a move to kiss her. She
thought the attempt seemed awkward.
[48]
Mr. Ghomeshi gave Ms. DeCoutere a tour of his house. She was
impressed with how organized and well-kept it was. Then, suddenly, out of the
blue, he kissed her. Ms. DeCoutere described how Mr. Ghomeshi put his hand
onto her throat and pushed her forcefully to the wall, choking her and slapping
her in the face. She was shocked, surprised and bewildered. She tried to remain
calm and act as if nothing unusual had happened. She stayed a while longer.
They listened to music and he played his guitar. Then, with a kiss good night, she
left.
[49]
Over the course of the weekend Ms. DeCoutere and Mr. Ghomeshi
attended several social events together. She thought that the assault might have
been a mistake or a “one off” of some sort. She internalized it. On one occasion,

— 9 —
she returned briefly to his home. She recalls accidentally stepping on his glasses
and that this upset him. She reports that he had become moody but there were
no further acts of violence. Ms. DeCoutere firmly stated that after this weekend
she had no intention of having any sort of ongoing personal relationship with Mr.
Ghomeshi.
[50]
After the weekend, Ms. DeCoutere sent Mr. Ghomeshi flowers in
appreciation of him being such a great host during her visit to Toronto.
[51]
In October of 2003 their paths crossed at the Gemini Awards dinner in
Toronto. The television series in which she was a cast member was nominated.
Mr. Ghomeshi came to her table, chatted and at one point reached out and
touched her neck. Ms. DeCoutere interpreted this touch to the neck as an
unsettling reminder of the July assault.
[52]
In June 2004 both Ms. DeCoutere and Mr. Ghomeshi attended the Banff
Film Festival and they spent time together there. At a karaoke event at the Banff
Springs Hotel, Ms. DeCoutere was on the stage singing the Britney Spears’ song
“Hit Me Baby One More Time”. Mr. Ghomeshi joined her in a duet. She
characterized the performance as “hilarious”.
[53]
After the 2004 Banff Film Festival they met occasionally at industry
events. When being interviewed about their history together prior to 2014, Ms.
DeCoutere acknowledged that there were probably more social meetings and
dinners, the details of which she could not recall. She referred to these meetings
as “inconsequential”.
[54]
Ms. DeCoutere did not report this assault in 2003 because she thought
that the incident was not serious enough. She said that she thought you had to
be “beaten to pieces … broken and raped” before going to the police. Ms.
DeCoutere came forward publically with her complaint in 2014, when she heard
of Mr. Ghomeshi being terminated by the CBC. Ms. DeCoutere said that her plan
was to take her experience to the press. She came to Toronto and gave
numerous media interviews. She said that she was not interested in legal action
being taken against Mr. Ghomeshi. She only went to the police because they had
asked for anyone with information to speak to them.
[55]
Ms. DeCoutere’s credibility and reliability as a witness were vigorously
challenged in cross-examination, revealing serious problems with accepting her
evidence at full value.
Late Disclosure of Material Information
[56]
Just prior to Ms. DeCoutere being called as a witness, she met with the
Crown and police and revealed a significant amount of new information to the
prosecution. This last minute disclosure of information occurred despite having
the assistance of her own counsel throughout the many months leading up to the

— 10 —
trial and despite her acknowledgment that a line of communication with the
investigating officers and Crown counsel was well-established throughout this
period of time.
[57]
Ms. DeCoutere insisted that her late disclosure was spontaneous and
denied being aware that the previous witness, L.R., had been confronted with
embarrassing emails from 2004. Ms. DeCoutere insisted that her reason for
coming forward with new information on February 2, 2016, was that she did not
understand the “importance” or “impact” of the information until then.
[58]
In cross-examination Ms. DeCoutere confirmed that she did not mention
in her sworn police interview, or in any of her 19 reported media interviews, that
Mr. Ghomeshi had attempted to kiss her during their walk to his home; that they
kissed on the couch after the alleged assault; that they kissed goodnight when
she left his home that evening. None of that was disclosed prior to the trial.
[59]
When asked directly by Detective Ansari in her police interview what she
and Mr. Ghomeshi did in the time between the alleged assault and her departure
from his home, she simply said “nothing stuck” in her memory. Trying to explain
this inconsistency, she testified that she did not think kissing with her assailant
after the alleged assault was very “consequential”.
[60]
It is difficult for me to believe that someone who was choked as part of a
sexual assault, would consider kissing sessions with the assailant both before
and after the assault not worth mentioning when reporting the matter to the
police. I can understand being reluctant to mention it, but I do not understand her
thinking that it was not relevant.
[61]
Ms. DeCoutere remembered and reported minute details of their date:
what Mr. Ghomeshi ordered at the restaurant; how he organized his shirts; that
the temperature of his house was perfect; and that fresh flowers were on the
table. All this was memorable and remarkable, yet she claimed to have left out
the kissing and the cuddling because she thought brevity and succinctness were
important. I do not accept this as a credible explanation.
[62]
Ms. DeCoutere repeatedly stated that Mr. Ghomeshi’s suggestion about
lying down together and listening to music was creepy, cheesy or otherwise
unappealing. It made her instantly uncomfortable. However, five days later, when
she penned him a “love letter”, she wrote, “What on earth could be better than
lying with you, listening to music and having peace?”
Inconsistencies in Recounting the Alleged Assault
[63]
Ms. DeCoutere told the police, under oath, that her recollection of the
events that took place at Mr. Ghomeshi’s house was “all jumbled”. She told them
that at a certain point she and Mr. Ghomeshi started kissing but, “I don’t
remember the order of events.” She was not sure whether the choking or the

— 11 —
slapping came first. However, when she spoke to the Toronto Star a few days
prior to her police interview, she said that it was choking and then slapping.
When she spoke to the CTV, she was not sure about the order. At trial, for the
first time, she gave a clear and specific sequence of events: a push up against
the wall; two slaps; a pause, and then another slap. She acknowledged in crossexamination that this was, again, another new or different version of the events.
[64]
An inability to recall the sequence of such a traumatic event from over a
decade ago is not very surprising and in most instances, it would be of little
concern. However, what is troubling about this evidence is not the lack of clarity
but, rather, the shifting of facts from one telling of the incident to the next. Each
differing version of the events was put forward by this witness as a sincere and
accurate recollection.
[65]
When a witness is comfortable with giving differing versions of the same
event, it suggests a degree of carelessness with the truth that diminishes the
general reliability of the witness.
Disclosure of an Ongoing Relationship
[66]
Lucy DeCoutere swore to the police that after the alleged assault in
2003 she only saw Mr. Ghomeshi “in passing”. She was polite to him, only
because she did not want to jeopardize her future professional prospects. She
“didn’t pursue any kind of relationship” with him. Ms. DeCoutere was asked
directly by the police interviewers to tell them everything about her relationship
with Mr. Ghomeshi, before and after the alleged assault.
[67]
It became clear at trial that Ms. DeCoutere very deliberately chose not to
be completely honest with the police. Her statement to the police was what
initiated these proceedings. This statement was subject to a formal caution
concerning the potential criminal consequences of making a false statement. It
was given under oath, an oath to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
truth, not a selective version of the truth. Despite this formal caution and oath,
Ms. DeCoutere proceeded to consciously suppress relevant and material
information. This reflects very negatively on her general reliability and credibility
as a witness. It indicates a failure to take the oath seriously and a wilful
carelessness with the truth.
[68]
On the evening of the second day of trial and just before Ms. DeCoutere
was set to testify, her lawyer approached Crown counsel with a question. If there
was more to the post-assault relationship between Ms. DeCoutere and Mr.
Ghomeshi than what had already been disclosed, would the Crown be interested
in knowing about it? I can only imagine Crown counsel’s reaction.
[69]
A further formal, sworn police statement was taken from Ms. DeCoutere
and then disclosed to the defence. This new statement disclosed for the first time

— 12 —
the fact that Ms. DeCoutere sent flowers to Mr. Ghomeshi days after the alleged
choking. It disclosed for the first time that she and Mr. Ghomeshi spent a
considerable amount of time together in Banff in 2004. She also acknowledged
that there were additional emails between them. All of this was deliberately
withheld by Ms. DeCoutere up until this point in time.
[70]
I do not accept that Ms. DeCoutere could have sincerely thought that all
this was inconsequential and of no interest to the prosecution. She may have
been afraid to disclose this information. She may have been embarrassed to
disclose this information. These would not be unreasonable feelings; but to say
that she decided not to disclose this information because she thought it was of no
importance is just not credible.
[71]
To make matters worse, when given this last minute opportunity to make
full disclosure, she still failed to do so.
Additional Deception Revealed in Cross-examination
[72]
In an effort to explain to the Court her continued socializing with Mr.
Ghomeshi following the alleged choking incident and over the rest of the 2003
Canada Day weekend, Ms. DeCoutere testified that she wanted to “normalize”
the situation and “flatten the negative”, and to not make him feel like a bad host.
So, she stuck with their plans and she continued to see him over the weekend.
She testified that she kept her distance and certainly did not do anything intimate
with him. Having firmly committed herself to this position, she was then
confronted with a photograph of herself cuddling affectionately in the park with
Mr. Ghomeshi the very next day.
Banff 2004
[73]
Ms. DeCoutere’s new disclosure included, for the first time, information
about her contact with Mr. Ghomeshi at the 2004 Banff festival, including the “Hit
Me Baby One More Time” karaoke duet. She attempted to explain the last minute
timing of this disclosure as being the “first chance” that she felt she had to tell
anyone. I find this explanation unconvincing coming from a witness who had
been interviewed dozens of times prior to trial, had established a continual flow of
email correspondence with the investigating police, and who had her own lawyer
involved in the case for a year and a half leading up to the trial. If she truly
intended to provide this information, she had ample means and opportunity to do
so.
[74]
After the 2004 Banff festival, Ms. DeCoutere sent Mr. Ghomeshi a
photograph of their Banff Springs “Hit Me Baby One More Time” karaoke
performance with the caption “proof that you can’t live without me.” When
confronted in cross-examination with this photograph and the “playful” caption,
her explanation was that this was part of an effort to make Mr. Ghomeshi “less of

— 13 —
an assaulter and more of a friend.” This explanation lacks credibility when
combined with the further details brought out in cross-examination about the
Banff 2004 visit.
[75]
In advance of going to Banff, Ms. DeCoutere emailed Mr. Ghomeshi and
told him that she wanted to “play” with him when they were in Banff. She
suggested that maybe they would have a “chance encounter in the broom
closet.” The response from Mr. Ghomeshi was expressly non-committal, “I’d love
to hang but can’t promise much.”
[76]
Ms. DeCoutere emailed back to Mr. Ghomeshi saying she was going to
“beat the crap” out of him if they didn’t hang out together in Banff and that she
would like to “tap [him] on the shoulder for breakfast.” This correspondence
paints a suggestive picture. It reads as if Ms. DeCoutere was, at that point in
time, clearly pursuing Mr. Ghomeshi with an interest in spending more time
together.
[77]
A natural assumption might be that what was actually stopping Ms.
DeCoutere from sharing all of this undisclosed information, was the fear that to
some audiences this post-event socializing would reflect badly on her claims that
this man had in fact assaulted her.
[78]
Had she genuinely feared that this sort of thinking would unfairly
undermine her credibility, that concern might have been an explanation worth
giving careful consideration. However she offered an entirely different
explanation for supressing this information.
[79]
Ms. DeCoutere said her plan was to disclose all of these things once the
trial began. She said that she had always intended to reveal this information but
thought that the trial would be her first chance to do so. With respect, that
explanation seems unreasonable to me. Ms. DeCoutere had literally dozens of
pre-trial opportunities to provide the full picture to the authorities. I suspect the
truth is she simply thought that she might get away with not mentioning it.
The Flowers
[80]
Another item in the new disclosure statement was the information that
Ms. DeCoutere sent flowers to Mr. Ghomeshi following the Canada Day weekend
in Toronto. Within days of when she says she was choked by Mr. Ghomeshi, she
sent him flowers to thank him for being such a good host. Sending thank you
flowers to the man who had just choked you, may seem like odd behaviour. I
acknowledge that this might be part of her effort, as she said, to normalize the
situation. However, whether or not this behaviour should be considered unusual
or not, this was very clearly relevant and material information in the context of a
sexual assault allegation. The deliberate withholding of the information reflects
very poorly on Ms. DeCoutere’s trustworthiness as a witness.

— 14 —
The Undisclosed Evidence of a Continued Relationship
[81]
I find as a fact that Ms. DeCoutere attempted to mislead the Court about
her continued relationship with Mr. Ghomeshi. It was only during crossexamination that her expressed interest in a continuing close relationship was
revealed.
[82]
Ms. DeCoutere testified that after the weekend in Toronto in July 2003,
she definitely knew that she did not want to have a romantic relationship with Mr.
Ghomeshi. She gave us her “guarantee” under oath that she had no romantic
feelings for Mr. Ghomeshi. Even in her late disclosure, just prior to taking the
stand, Ms. DeCoutere claimed that any personal contact with Mr. Ghomeshi
following the Canada Day long-weekend in 2003 was simply an attempt to
"flatten out [her] negative." She maintained that any emails that she sent to Mr.
Ghomeshi following that weekend were "indifferent" in tone and not "playful", as
they had been previously.
[83]
Once again this was simply not true. In an email sent just two weeks
later, on July 17, 2003, Ms. DeCoutere told Mr. Ghomeshi that he was “magic”.
On July 25, 2003, three weeks after the alleged assault, she wrote to Mr.
Ghomeshi that she was “really glad to know you”. On April 6, 2004, she wrote an
email to Mr. Ghomeshi suggesting help with “an itch that you need… scratching”.
On October 19, 2005, she sent him what she described herself as a “ridiculous,
sexualized photo” of herself with the neck of a beer bottle in her mouth simulating
an act of fellatio. As recently as September 8, 2010, she posted a Facebook
message fondly recalling the 2003 Canada Day weekend.
[84]
On July 5th 2003, within twenty-four hours of the alleged choking
incident, Ms. DeCoutere emailed Mr. Ghomeshi with the message:
“Getting to know you is literally changing my mind, in a good
way. You challenge me and point to stuff that has not been
pulled out in a very long time. I can tell you about that sometime and everything about our friendship so far will make
sense. You kicked my ass last night and that makes me want
to fuck your brains out, tonight.”
There is not a trace of animosity, regret or offence taken, in that message.
[85]
Five days after the alleged choking assault, Ms. DeCoutere was home in
Halifax and she sent a hand-written love letter to Jian Ghomeshi. She expressed
her regret that she and Mr. Ghomeshi had not spent that night together. The
letter concludes, “I love your hands.” When confronted with this seemingly
incongruous message, from someone who claims to have been recently choked
by the recipient’s hands, she said that she was intentionally referencing the thing
that had hurt her.

— 15 —
[86]
Ms. DeCoutere attempted to explain this correspondence as an effort at
“flattening the negative” or normalizing a relationship. I acknowledge that the
Court must guard against assuming that seemingly odd reactive behaviour of a
complainant necessarily indicates fabrication. However, this is an illustration of
the witness’s actual behaviour, evidenced by her own written expressions. It is
behaviour that is out of harmony with her evidence in-chief and her multiple pretrial statements to the media and to the police.
[87]
In the framework of a credibility analysis in a criminal trial, Ms.
DeCoutere’s attempt to hide this information evidences a manipulative course of
conduct. This raises additional and mounting concerns regarding her reliability as
a witness.
[88]
In trying to reconcile the apparent disconnect between Ms. DeCoutere’s
evidence and some of the established facts, another perhaps more subtle but
related concern needs to be identified. It may be entirely natural for a victim of
abuse to become involved in an advocacy group. However, the manner in which
Ms. DeCoutere embraced and cultivated her role as an advocate for the cause of
victims of sexual violence may explain some of her questionable conduct as a
witness in these proceedings.
[89]
On December 9, 2014, she told S.D., that she, Ms. DeCoutere, the
professional actor, was excited for the trial because it was going to be “…theatre
at its best.” “…Dude, with my background I literally feel like I was prepped to take
this on, no shit.” “…This trial does not freak me out. I invite the media shit.”
[90]
Ms. DeCoutere engaged the services of a publicist for her involvement
in this case. She gave 19 media interviews and received massive attention for
her role in this case. Hashtag “ibelievelucy” became very popular on Twitter and
she was very excited when the actor Mia Farrow tweeted support and joined
what Ms. DeCoutere referred to as the “team”. In an interview with CTV news,
Ms. DeCoutere even analogized her role in this whole matter to David Beckham’s
role as a spokesperson with Armani.
[91]
I have to consider whether as a member of this “team”, Ms. DeCoutere
felt that she had invested so much in being a “heroine” for the cause that this
may have been additional motivation to suppress any information that, in her
mind, might be interpreted negatively. I do not have sufficient evidence to
conclude that this was in fact a reason for suppressing evidence, but in light of
the amount of compromising information that she wilfully attempted to supress, it
cannot be ignored as a live question.
[92]
In her email correspondence with one of the other complainants,
exchanged after the charges were laid, Ms. DeCoutere expressed strong
animosity towards Mr. Ghomeshi. She said she wanted to see that Mr. Ghomeshi
was "fucking decimated" and stated, "the guy's a shit show, time to flush"; and

— 16 —
then very bluntly just, "Fuck Ghomeshi".
[93]
All of the extreme animosity expressed since going public with her
complaint in 2014 stands in stark contrast to the flirtatious correspondence and
interactions of 2003 and 2004, words and actions that are preserved in the
emails and photographs she says she forgot about.
[94]
Let me emphasize strongly, it is the suppression of evidence and the
deceptions maintained under oath that drive my concerns with the reliability of
this witness, not necessarily her undetermined motivations for doing so. It is
difficult to have trust in a witness who engages in the selective withholding
relevant information.
THE EVIDENCE OF MS. DUNSWORTH
[95]
Ms. Dunsworth, a close friend of Ms. DeCoutere, gave a sworn
statement to the Halifax police in November of 2015 in which she stated that at
some point, about ten years ago, Ms. DeCoutere spoke to her about a choking
incident that had occurred while she was on a date with Mr. Ghomeshi. Ms.
DeCoutere wondered if her friend agreed that it was "weird". This evidence was
tendered for the very limited purpose of offsetting any implied allegation of
"recent fabrication" that may have arisen from the cross-examination of Ms.
DeCoutere.
[96]
Shortly before Ms. Dunsworth was interviewed by the police, Ms.
DeCoutere contacted her to advise her that the police needed to speak to her.
She told her friend that she had already advised the police that she had told Ms.
Dunsworth “AGES ago”, (in capital letters for emphasis I assume) about what
had happened with Mr. Ghomeshi. She added, “It makes me look like I am not a
copycat…". The response from Ms. Dunsworth was, "corroborate ha ha" … "ya,
no prob".
[97]
At the time that this evidence was tendered, I admitted it into evidence
because I was concerned that it might ultimately be inferred that the complaint
was fabricated in 2014. To be clear, this was my concern at the time. Counsel for
the accused did not make an express allegation of "recent" fabrication in this
case.
[98]
The rule of evidence against the admissibility of this sort of earlier
statement of a witness is a rule against "self-corroboration". Having spoken of
something similar a decade ago does not make the present allegation anymore
true or false. The fact of the earlier discussion simply offsets any inference that it
was fabricated in 2014. Being consistent is a trait that can be common to either
the truth or a lie, and so is logically no more probative of the substance of the
evidence at trial being true or being false.

— 17 —
[99]
Ms. Dunsworth’s evidence places Ms. DeCoutere's private complaint
well before the public events of 2014. Apart from this limited use, the evidence is
of little assistance with respect to the general veracity of Ms. DeCoutere's
evidence at trial.
THE COMPLAINT OF S.D.
[100]
The charge relating to S.D. alleges a sexual assault said to have
occurred sometime between July 15th, 2003 and the 2nd of August 2003.
[101]
The allegation is that on the material date, while “making out” on a
secluded park bench, Mr. Ghomeshi squeezed S.D.’s neck forcefully enough to
cause discomfort and interfere with her ability to breathe.
[102]
At the time of these events, S.D. was a dancer in a production
performing in a Toronto park. She knew, or at least knew of, Mr. Ghomeshi
through her involvement in the arts and entertainment industry. Following a
particular performance, Mr. Ghomeshi approached her and initiated a
conversation. This led to a dinner date and a second post-performance meeting
in the park.
[103]
It was after dark. S.D. and Mr. Ghomeshi strolled to the baseball
diamond for privacy. They sat on a bench and kissed. She felt his hands and his
teeth on and around her neck. It was rough and it was unwelcome. It was “not
right” and it caused her difficulty in breathing. It lasted a few seconds. Nothing
was said about it at the time.
[104]
S.D. and Mr. Ghomeshi socialized two or three more times in the days
and weeks following this incident in the park, and then had no further
relationship. This is the extent of what S.D. initially related to the police.
[105]
S.D. was not particularly precise or consistent in the details of the
alleged assault. She explained that some of the imprecision in her initial account
to the police was due to her still "trying to figure it out".
[106]
Some lack of precision is to be expected in any report of conduct from
over a decade earlier. However, it is reasonable to expect that a true account of
significant events will not vary too dramatically from time to time in the telling.
The standard of proof in a criminal case requires sufficient clarity in the evidence
to allow a confident acceptance of the essential facts. This portion of S.D.’s
evidence at trial illustrates my concern on this last point:
He had his hand - it was sort of - it was sort of his hands
were on my shoulders, kind of on my arms here, and then it
was - and then I felt his teeth and then his hands around my
neck. … It was rough but - yeah, it was rough.

— 18 —
…
Q. Were his hands open, were they closed?
A. It's really hard for me to say, but it was just - I just felt his
hands around my neck, all around my neck. … And I - I think
I tried to - I tried to get out of it and then his hand was on my
mouth, sort of smothering me.
Q. Okay. I'm going to go back. So the hands were around
your neck. How long were they around your neck?
A. Seconds. A few seconds. Ten seconds. I don't even - I
don't - it's hard to know. It's hard to know.
Q. And did his hands around your neck cause you any
difficulties breathing?
A. Yes.
Possible Collusion
[107]
S.D. said that her decision to come forward was inspired by others
coming forward in 2014. She consumed the media reports and spoke to others
for about six weeks after the “Ghomeshi Scandal” broke in the media. Although
she initially testified that she and Ms. DeCoutere never discussed the details of
her experience prior to her police interview, in cross-examination she admitted
that in fact she had.
[108]
I am alert to the danger that some of this outside influence and
information may have been imported into her own admittedly imprecise
recollection of her experience with Mr. Ghomeshi.
[109]
The extreme dedication to bringing down Mr. Ghomeshi is evidenced
vividly in the email correspondence between S.D. and Ms. DeCoutere. Between
October 29, 2014 and September 2015, S.D. and Ms. DeCoutere exchanged
approximately 5,000 messages. While this anger and this animus may simply
reflect the legitimate feelings of victims of abuse, it also raises the need for the
Court to proceed with caution. Ms. DeCoutere and S.D. considered themselves
to be a “team” and the goal was to bring down Mr. Ghomeshi.
[110]
The team bond between Ms. DeCoutere and S.D. was strong. They
discussed witnesses, court dates and meetings with the prosecution. They
described their partnership as being “insta sisters”. They shared a publicist. They
initially shared the same lawyer. They spoke of together building a “Jenga Tower”
against Mr. Ghomeshi. They expressed their top priority in the crude vernacular
that they sometimes employed, to “sink the prick,… ‘cause he’s a fucking piece of
shit.”

— 19 —
The Last Minute Disclosure
[111]
S.D. met with Crown counsel five times in the year prior to the trial of
this matter. On each occasion she was reminded of the need to be completely
honest and accurate. At no time until almost literally the eve of being called to the
witness stand did she reveal the whole truth of her relationship with Mr.
Ghomeshi. The most dramatic aspect of S.D.’s evidence was her last minute
disclosure to the prosecution of sexual activity with Mr. Ghomeshi on a date
following the date of the alleged assault in the park.
[112]
It is now apparent that in her initial interviews, S.D was putting forward
her non-association with Mr. Ghomeshi after the assault, as evidence that she
had reason to fear him. She said that she “always kept her distance” from Mr.
Ghomeshi. She felt unsafe around Mr. Ghomeshi. In her statement to the police
she acknowledged that she went out a couple of times with Mr. Ghomeshi after
the alleged assault but underscored that it was always in public. She told the
police that “the extent of it is, we’re going to be in public.” They went to a bar and
they had a dinner date.
[113]
At trial, a very different truth was revealed. After meeting with Mr.
Ghomeshi at a bar, in public, she took him back to her home and, to use her
words, they “messed around”. She gave him a “hand job”. He slept there for a
while then went home. This of course was dramatically contrary to her earlier
statement that she “tried to stay in public with him” and keep her distance. S.D.
acknowledged that her earlier comments were a deliberate lie and an intentional
misrepresentation of her brief relationship with Mr. Ghomeshi.
[114]
S.D.’s decision to supress this information until the last minute, prior to
trial, greatly undermines the Court’s confidence in her evidence. In assessing the
credibility of a witness, the active suppression of the truth will be as damaging to
their reliability as a direct lie under oath.
[115]
S.D. claimed that she did not think it was important to disclose this
intimate contact and said she wasn’t “specifically” asked about post-assault
sexual activity with Mr. Ghomeshi. She ultimately acknowledged that she left out
things because she felt it didn’t fit “the pattern”. And when pressed further in
cross-examination, she said that she did not think that what had happened
between them at her home qualified as “sex”.
[116]
On February 25, 2004, more than six months after the alleged assault in
the park, S.D. sent Mr. Ghomeshi an email which included her asking him, “Still
want to have that drink sometime?” These are not the words of someone
endeavouring to keep her distance.
[117]
When S.D. decided to make this disclosure, the other two complainants
had already given evidence and had been seriously embarrassed when

— 20 —
confronted with their own dramatic non-disclosures. S.D. had reviewed her sworn
police complaint the week prior to trial and at that time offered no additions,
qualifications or corrections. She says that she inadvertently heard something on
the radio about emails being presented to the other complainants. She realized
at that point that everything was going to come out and that it was time to
disclose the true extent of their relationship.
[118]
I accept Ms. Henein’s characterization of this behaviour. S.D. was
clearly “playing chicken” with the justice system. She was prepared to tell half the
truth for as long as she thought she might get away with it. Clearly, S.D. was
following the proceedings more closely than she cared to admit and she knew
that she was about to run head first into the whole truth.
[119]
S.D offered an excuse for hiding this information. She said that this was
her “first kick at the can”, and that she did not know how “to navigate” this sort of
proceeding. “Navigating” this sort of proceeding is really quite simple: tell the
truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
THE FRAMEWORK OF ANALYSIS
[120]
The fundamental framework of analysis in a criminal trial is often left
significantly abbreviated in judge alone trials. In this case, however, it is
important to state this framework clearly. It plays the central role in the
determination of this matter.
The Presumption of Innocence
[121]
The primary and overarching principle in every criminal trial is the
presumption of innocence. This is the most fundamental principle of our criminal
justice system. It is essential to understand that this presumption of innocence is
not a favour or charity extended to the accused in this particular case. To be
presumed innocent until proven guilty by the evidence presented in a court of
law, is the fundamental right of every person accused of criminal conduct.
Proof Beyond Reasonable Doubt
[122]
Interwoven with the presumption of innocence is the standard of proof
required to displace that presumption. To secure a conviction in a criminal case
the Crown must establish each essential element of the charge against the
accused to a point of "proof beyond reasonable doubt". This standard of proof is
very exacting. It is a standard far beyond the civil threshold of proof on a balance
of probabilities.
[123]
The law recognizes a spectrum of degrees of proof. The police lay
charges on the basis of "reasonable grounds to believe" that an offence has been
committed. Prosecutions only proceed to trial if the case meets the Crown’s

— 21 —
screening standard of there being "a reasonable prospect of conviction". In civil
litigation, a plaintiff need only establish their case on a "balance of probabilities”.
However to support a conviction in a criminal case, the strength of evidence must
go much farther and establish the Crown’s case to a point of proof beyond a
reasonable doubt. This is not a standard of absolute or scientific certainty, but it is
a standard that certainly approaches that. Anything less entitles an accused to
the full benefit of the presumption of innocence and a dismissal of the charge.
[124]
The expression proof "beyond a reasonable doubt" has no precise
definition, but it is well understood. The Supreme Court of Canada outlined a
suggested model jury charge in R. v. Lifchus1. This is the definitive guide for
criminal trial courts in Canada. It is worth setting out here verbatim:
 The term "beyond a reasonable doubt" has been used
for a very long time and is a part of our history and
traditions of justice. It is so engrained in our criminal
law that some think it needs no explanation, yet
something must be said regarding its meaning.
 A reasonable doubt is not an imaginary or frivolous
doubt. It must not be based upon sympathy or
prejudice. Rather, it is based on reason and common
sense. It is logically derived from the evidence or
absence of evidence.
 Even if you believe the accused is probably guilty or
likely guilty, that is not sufficient. In those
circumstances you must give the benefit of the doubt
to the accused and acquit because the Crown has
failed to satisfy you of the guilt of the accused beyond
a reasonable doubt.
 On the other hand you must remember that it is
virtually impossible to prove anything to an absolute
certainty and the Crown is not required to do so. Such
a standard of proof is impossibly high.
 In short if, based upon the evidence before the court,
you are sure that the accused committed the offence
you should convict since this demonstrates that you
are satisfied of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
I instruct myself accordingly.

1

[1997] 3 S.C.R. 320

— 22 —
The Historical Nature of the Complaints
[125]
The allegations before the Court in this case are legally referred to as
"historical complaints" in the sense that they are complaints made now with
respect to events that occurred many years ago. The courts recognize that trials
of long past events can raise particular challenges due to the passage of time.
Memories tend to fade, and time tends to erode the quality and availability of
evidence.
[126]
Each of the complainants in this case pointed to certain aspects of the
publicity surrounding Mr. Ghomeshi's very public termination from the CBC in
2014 as the trigger for coming forward with their complaints more than a decade
after the fact. The law is clear: there should be no presumptive adverse inference
arising when a complainant in a sexual assault case fails to come forward at the
time of the events. Each complainant articulated her own very valid reasons for
not coming forward at the time of the events. The law also recognizes that there
should be nothing presumptively suspect in incremental disclosure of sexual
assaults or abuse. Each case must be assessed individually in light of its own
unique set of circumstances.
Similar Act Evidence
[127]
Similar act evidence is presumptively inadmissible. Evidence of an
accused's alleged propensity to commit the particular type of crime with which he
is charged with is inadmissible. The Crown expressly agreed that each complaint
contained in the Information before the Court must be determined on its own
merits.
CONCLUSIONS
[128]
I have very deliberately considered the evidence relating to each of the
charges separately. Each complainant in this case had a different and unique
experience with Mr. Ghomeshi. However, there are certain common aspects to
their cases. Each had some involvement in the arts and entertainment world,
which brought them into contact with the accused: an event catering waiter; an
actor; and a dancer. Each complainant accused him of a certain act of violence in
the context of a brief dating relationship. Each one chose not to make a
complaint to the authorities until years after the fact. Each one came forward in
2014 in the wake of, or in the midst of, the extensive publicity surrounding the
very public termination of Mr. Ghomeshi at the CBC.
[129]
Each complainant chose to come forward to the media first and then
subsequently gave sworn video-recorded statements to the police.
[130]
Each complainant was aware of Mr. Ghomeshi and his celebrity status
prior to meeting him. Each was a fan to some greater or lesser extent. Each had

— 23 —
a brief relationship with him that ended badly. Each one complains of some
degree of violence occurring in the course of some intimacy: a very forceful yank
on the hair; being grabbing by the hair and punched in the head; a choke hold
with slaps to the face and hands squeezing at the neck. Each event passed as
quickly as it occurred. Each complainant acknowledged maintaining some brief,
amicable contact with the accused after the fact and then moving on. These were
the complaints that gave rise to the charges before this Court.
[131]
There is no legal bar to convicting on the uncorroborated evidence of a
single witness. However, one of the challenges for the prosecution in this case is
that the allegations against Mr. Ghomeshi are supported by nothing in addition to
the complainant’s word. There is no other evidence to look to determine the truth.
There is no tangible evidence. There is no DNA. There is no "smoking gun".
There is only the sworn evidence of each complainant, standing on its own, to be
measured against a very exacting standard of proof. This highlights the
importance of the assessment of the credibility and the reliability and the overall
quality, of that evidence.
[132]
At trial, each complainant recounted their experience with Mr. Ghomeshi
and was then subjected to extensive and revealing cross-examination. The
cross-examination dramatically demonstrated that each complainant was less
than full, frank and forthcoming in the information they provided to the media, to
the police, to Crown counsel and to this Court.
[133]
Ultimately my assessment of each of the counts against the accused
turns entirely on the assessment of the reliability and credibility of the
complainant, when measured against the Crown’s burden of proof. With respect
to each charge, the only necessary determination is simply this: Does the
evidence have sufficient quality and force to establish the accused’s guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt?
[134]
Mr. Ghomeshi did not testify and he called no evidence in defence of the
allegations. One of the most important organizing principles in our criminal law is
the right of an accused not to be conscripted into building a case against oneself.
Every accused facing criminal allegations is entitled to plead not guilty and put
the Crown to the strict proof of the charges. An accused has every right to remain
silent, call no evidence and seek an acquittal on the basis that the Crown’s case
fails to establish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. No adverse inference
arises from his decision to do so in this case.
[135]
As I have stated more than once, the courts must be very cautious in
assessing the evidence of complainants in sexual assault and abuse cases.
Courts must guard against applying false stereotypes concerning the expected
conduct of complainants. I have a firm understanding that the reasonableness of
reactive human behaviour in the dynamics of a relationship can be variable and
unpredictable. However, the twists and turns of the complainants’ evidence in this

— 24 —
trial, illustrate the need to be vigilant in avoiding the equally dangerous false
assumption that sexual assault complainants are always truthful. Each individual
and each unique factual scenario must be assessed according to their own
particular circumstances.
[136]
Each complainant in this case engaged in conduct regarding Mr.
Ghomeshi, after the fact, which seems out of harmony with the assaultive
behaviour ascribed to him. In many instances, their conduct and comments were
even inconsistent with the level of animus exhibited by each of them, both at the
time and then years later. In a case that is entirely dependent on the reliability of
their evidence standing alone, these are factors that cause me considerable
difficulty when asked to accept their evidence at full value.
[137]
Each complainant was confronted with a volume of evidence that was
contrary to their prior sworn statements and their evidence in-chief. Each
complainant demonstrated, to some degree, a willingness to ignore their oath to
tell the truth on more than one occasion. It is this aspect of their evidence that is
most troubling to the Court.
[138]
The success of this prosecution depended entirely on the Court being
able to accept each complainant as a sincere, honest and accurate witness.
Each complainant was revealed at trial to be lacking in these important attributes.
The evidence of each complainant suffered not just from inconsistencies and
questionable behaviour, but was tainted by outright deception.
[139]
The harsh reality is that once a witness has been shown to be deceptive
and manipulative in giving their evidence, that witness can no longer expect the
Court to consider them to be a trusted source of the truth. I am forced to
conclude that it is impossible for the Court to have sufficient faith in the reliability
or sincerity of these complainants. Put simply, the volume of serious deficiencies
in the evidence leaves the Court with a reasonable doubt.
[140]
My conclusion that the evidence in this case raises a reasonable doubt
is not the same as deciding in any positive way that these events never
happened. At the end of this trial, a reasonable doubt exists because it is
impossible to determine, with any acceptable degree of certainty or comfort, what
is true and what is false. The standard of proof in a criminal case requires
sufficient clarity in the evidence to allow a confident acceptance of the essential
facts. In these proceedings the bedrock foundation of the Crown’s case is tainted
and incapable of supporting any clear determination of the truth.
[141]
I have no hesitation in concluding that the quality of the evidence in this
case is incapable of displacing the presumption of innocence. The evidence fails
to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt.

— 25 —
[142]
I find Mr. Ghomeshi not guilty on all of these charges and they will be
noted as dismissed.